Tompkins v. Hooker

226 S.W. 1114, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1216
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1920
DocketNo. 2309.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 1114 (Tompkins v. Hooker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tompkins v. Hooker, 226 S.W. 1114, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1216 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

WILLSON, C. J.

This is the second time this case has been before this court. The issues on the last trial were the same as on the first trial, except that on the last trial it was not controverted that Christina Lawson died in 1870, intestate and without issue, and left as her only heirs her husband, Pleasant Lawson, who died in 1911, and brothers and sisters and descendants of other brothers and sisters, who were the plaintiffs in the court below. The nature, etc., of the case is fully stated in the opinion by Judge Hodges disposing of the former appeal (see 200 S. W. 193), and will not be restated here.

[1] On special issues submitted to them the jury found that Pleasant Lawson never repudiated the joint tenancy in the land in question existing between him and appellees and others plaintiffs in the court below. An assignment attacking the finding as against the testimony is grouped with assignments predicated on the refusal of the court to give certain special charges which appellants requested, and which, had they been given, would have instructed the jury as to conditions on which they should find, if' said Lawson had repudiated such joint tenancy, that appellees and the other plaintiffs had notice thereof. Appellees insist that the grouping of the assignments is a violation of the rules for briefing cases (rule 29 for Courts of Civil Appeals [142 S. W. xii]; Lumber Co. v. Arnold, 139 S. W. 1167; Scott v. Railway Co., 54 Tex. Civ. App. 54, 117 S. W. 890), and we agree it is. As, therefore, the assignments should not be considered, we have not undertaken to determine any of the questions they present, other than the one as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding that Pleasant Lawson never repudiated said joint tenancy. And, as the cause is to be remanded for a new trial, we will not comment on the testimony relevant to that issue further than to say that we think there were parts of it the jury had a right to believe which were sufficient to support the finding specified.

It appeared without dispute in the testimony that appellees, plaintiffs in the court below, each took an undivided interest in the land as an heir (or descendant of an heir) of Christina Lawson, deceased, and that Sutton and John Watson, coplaintiffs with ap-pellees in said courf, each took such an in *1115 terest as an heir of Ms deceased wife, who was an heir (or descendant of an heir) of said Christina Lawson; and it further so appeared that at the time of the trial appel-lees and said Sutton and Watson each, respectively, owned the interest he took unless the statute of limitations had operated to divest him of the title. The jury found on special issues submitted to them that said statute had not so operated; and the court, on that finding, adjudged in favor of the coplaintiffs (appellees here) of said Sutton and Watson, and against appellants on the latter’s plea setting up said statute, and then himself found, contrary to said finding of the jury, that the statute had operated to bar the right of Sutton and Watson to recover the interest they respectively owned as heirs aforesaid, and, notwithstanding the absence of either pleadings or proof on their part authorizing it, awarded to áppellees a recovery of the interest of said Sutton and Watson in the land.

This was error. If he thought appellants had failed to establish their plea, the court should have given the finding of the jury effect in favor of all the plaintiffs — Sutton and Watson as well as appellees. On the other hand, if the court thought, as the finding he made indicated he did, that it appeared from the testimony that the right of Sutton and Watson, to recover an interest in the land was barred by the statute, he should have set aside the finding of the jury; for it was in favor of all the plaintiffs, alike, and the court did not have a right to give it effect as to some and deny it effect as to others of them, and especially so in view of the fact that it appeared from the testimony that the position of plaintiffs in whose favor he enforced the finding was not different, so far as the statute of limitations was concerned, from that of plaintiffs in whose favor he refused to enforce it.

[2, 3] It further appeared without dispute in the testimony that one P. G. Benton, who was not a party to the suit, owned an undivided interest in the land as an heir of his deceased wife, who was an heir of said Christina Lawson, and as an heir of certain of his said wife’s children. The judgment of the court below was in favor of appellees for said Benton’s interest. Plainly it should not have been; for appellees, plaintiffs in the court below as before stated, were entitled to recover only the interest the testimony showed they owned in the land, and were not entitled to recover an interest therein which the testimony showed they did not own. The error is not one that can be corrected here, for the value of said Benton’s interest, which, on the record before this court, should have been deducted from the interest adjudged to appellees, cannot be determined from the testimony in said record. And, if the judgment could be corrected in the respect referred to, it would have to be reversed and the cause remanded to the court below, for a new trial so far as it was for a partition of the land; for a valid partition thereof could not be made so long as said Benton was not a party to the suit.

Of the assignments not already disposed of, and which present questions likely to arise on another trial, the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-second are overruled, and the twenty-first is sustained.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the court below for a new trial.

On Motion of Appellees for Rehearing.

In disposing of the appeal this court, without stating it, sustained the twenty-first assignment, predicated on the action of the trial court in admitting as evidence, over appellant’s objection, testimony of the witness J. L. Fulbright as follows:

“Q. Do you know how Pleas Lawson lived on that place after Christina Lawson’s death; how he came to live on it? A. Well, they just let him live on it. Now, when they had the partition made I was just talking about— maybe I better not say it, but when this suit for partition was brought Unde Ed Oliver and Hous Hooker wanted to partition and divide the property that he had, the 301 or 302 acres. I don’t know how much they wanted, but they wanted to divide it off, but the balance of the heirs that were there represented said they would let him keep it his lifetime, that he could not get away with it, and so it just went on that way. We did not sue him then for an interest in it at all.”

The grounds of the objection were:

“(1) That it was immaterial and irrelevant; (2) that it did not show that Pleasant Lawson was present or a party to the agreement so made by the heirs of David Fulbright; and (3) it was obnoxious to the statute of frauds.”

[4, .3] In the motion attention is called to the fact that the objection was to both the question, which, it is insisted, and we agree, was not objectionable, and to the answer as a whole, a part of which at least, it is insisted, was unobjectionable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 1114, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-hooker-texapp-1920.